The King’s Warden review – lively Korean period drama, as 15th century deposed monarch takes refuge

Yoo Hae-jin’s confident performance redeems this disjointed parable about an exiled king, which awkwardly straddles satire, sentiment and social commentaryIt seems that the 15th-century Korean equivalent of a special economic zone was a court official exiled to a remote backwater, with all the attendant wealth and comforts that arrive with them. That’s the hook of this lively period piece, in which village chieftain Um Heung-do (Yoo Hae-jin) strays into a neighbouring settlement and – because the former minister of justice is in residence – is amazed to find the place awash in mouth-smacking treats.Wanting a piece of that action, Heung-do puts in a bid to sinister government official Han Myeong-hoe (Oldboy’s Yoo Ji-tae) for his own outcast. But a pasty-faced youth turns up on a palanquin, and turns out to be a much bigger fish than the elder can handle: the kid is the recently deposed king Yi Hong-wi (played by K-pop singer Park Ji-hoon), who is too conspicuous to be openly bumped off ...


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Politics
ID: 4340404844593978399


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